"Being a Venezuelan living abroad is kind of like being someone who does CrossFit, the moment someone brings up the topic we cannot shut up about it," Hausmann says in the video. "Because to delve into Venezuela is like unpacking a little Russian doll of horrors."

The Venezuelan comedian then breaks down how her country went from oil powerhouse to a place where citizens are forced to wait in 8-hour lines to buy basic food and hygiene products.

"Let's start with how the place I love got f**ked," Hausmann says before discussing former president Hugo Chávez and his "minion successor" Nicolás Maduro's socialist revolution.

Dolores&nbsp;Huerta started&nbsp;advocating for women&rsquo;s rights following a brutal attack sustained during a peaceful and lawful protest of the policies of then Vice President <a href="http://doloreshuerta.org/dolores-huerta/">George H.W. Bush in 1988</a>.&nbsp;For two years, the award-winning civil rights activist and labor leader toured the country on behalf of the Feminist Majority&rsquo;s&nbsp;Feminization of Power: 50/50 by the year 2000 Campaign. In 2002, Huerta founded the aptly named <a href="http://doloreshuerta.org/dolores-huerta/">Dolores Huerta Foundation</a>, an organization that offers members programs such as the &ldquo;Weaves Movements Together,&rdquo; an initiative dedicated to raising awareness of women&rsquo;s rights and gay rights, as well as immigrant rights and labor rights.